subject predicate object context
69295 Creator 370f330fa27f05856dbea065fef76c72
69295 Date 2020
69295 Is Part Of repository
69295 Is Part Of p17450918
69295 abstract This article discusses the Australian artist Loudon Sainthill’s stage and costume designs for Michael Benthall’s Shakespeare Memorial Theatre production of The Tempest (1951, 1952). Calling upon a variety of performance documents, it considers what Sainthill’s work reveals about the hierarchical cultural relationship between Britain and its former colony at the time. At first glance, the acclaimed designer appears the ultimate cultural insider, a gifted cosmopolitan artist who successfully navigated his way from Tasmania to the summit of the British theatre industry. On closer examination, however, there is evidence that despite his apparently conciliatory approach, Sainthill’s complex visual style expressed the anxieties of Britain’s post-war transition from Empire to Commonwealth. Sainthill’s early career in the UK was shaped by theatrical-imperial networks intent on strengthening Commonwealth ties, and his fantasy-inflected settler-modernist style transplanted to Britain especially well during a period when the metropolis sought to imagine new post-imperial futures for itself. The surreal quality of Sainthill’s “antipodean” vision corresponded with increasingly ambivalent attitudes towards Britain’s imperial status, complicating its intended celebration of Britain’s post-war cultural renewal during the significant commemorative event of the Festival of Britain.
69295 authorList authors
69295 issue 1
69295 status published
69295 status peerReviewed
69295 volume 16
69295 type AcademicArticle
69295 type Article
69295 label Taylor, James (2020). Loudon Sainthill’s “Antipodean” Vision for Michael Benthall’s Tempest. Shakespeare, 16(1) pp. 68–79.
69295 Publisher ext-82d97d3d46da72def3ef996d0ad0810c
69295 Title Loudon Sainthill’s “Antipodean” Vision for Michael Benthall’s <i>Tempest</i>
69295 in dataset oro